To much fanfare, CMS released several data files containing hospital charge and payment data by state, county, (but not by individual facility) for the 30 most common DRGs and elective procedures. National, state and county financial ranges are included, and the volume of services provided at individual facilities are also available.
This is the first of three planned data releases; the next scheduled for this summer is for ambulatory surgical centers followed this fall by hospital outpatient numbers.
Promoted by the Administration as a part of Bush’s “commitment to make health care more affordable and accessible, President Bush directed the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to make cost and quality data available to all Americans”, the data is available at CMS’ website. I’m not sure how this data will help consumers become better…consumers, but in the meantime here’s my positive spin on the effort.
Here’s my take on what you can do with the data.
1. FIgure out how your payments compare to the Feds’, and use that to assess your contracting strategy.
2. Identify the hospitals that do the most specific procedures, and direct your patients/insureds/injured workers to those facilities…and away from the others.
3. Publish the data (after translating it into English) on your website so patients can draw their own conclusions.
4. Examine the volume of procedures at specific facilities and compare that to your payments to same see if there is a link between experience and efficiency (or at least billing practices).
5. Look at the payment to charge ratio and wonder.
6. Wonder how the release of the data will help consumers make better decisions, as individual hospital charge and payment data is not available.
There seems to be a problem here. How are consumers going to improve their ability to consume if individual facilities’ results are not posted? How could an individual consumer use these data to make better decisions? Do the Feds have a clue?
Here’s the detail on what’s in the files.
“Top 30 Elective Inpatient Hospital DRGs” contains the volume and ranges of Medicare payments between the 25th and 75th percentiles for a limited set of conditions treated in U.S. states and counties. Included are the 30 conditions that had the highest utilization rates among all Diagnosis Related Groups (DRGs). Data are aggregated at the county, state and national level.
“Other Inpatient Hospital DRGs of High Utilization” contains ranges of Medicare payments between the 25th and 75th percentiles for a limited set of conditions treated in U.S. states and counties. These conditions are not among the top 30 utilized Diagnosis Related Groups (DRGs), but were deemed of interest to the Medicare community. Data are aggregated at the county, state and national level.”
What does this mean for you?
See above.
Insight, analysis & opinion from Joe Paduda